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Research


SEAC aims to generate and support both discipline-based and interdisciplinary research on Southeast Asia.

SEAC supports research on Southeast Asia by scholars working within and across a range of disciplines in the social sciences, history, and law, in line with the academic resources and strengths of the LSE. SEAC-supported scholarship on Southeast Asia at the LSE extends across the departments and disciplines of Anthropology, Development Studies, Economic History, Economics, Geography and the Environment, Government, International History, and International Relations, and beyond. Through its affiliated academic staff, its support to students, its visiting fellowship schemes, and its seminars, workshops, and other events, SEAC endeavours to cover the full breadth of Southeast Asia, connections and comparisons between Southeast Asia and the rest of the world, and a diversity of issues and perspectives within the region. 

 

Research Projects 

SEAC is currently supporting the following research project:

Overlooked Cities Seminar Series: Thinking and doing global urban studies differently

Overlooked Cities

Overlooked Cities aims to reflect and impact the changing landscape of urban studies and geography from the perspective of smaller and more regional cities in the urban South. It critically examines the ways in which cities are uniquely positioned within different urban and knowledge hierarchies. 

Funded by the Urban Studies Foundation and supported by SEAC, this Seminar Series interrogates “overlooked cities” or “overlookedness” as a collective critique and elaborates on the praxis of counter-overlooking to provide renewed critical impetus to think about, write about, care about and act on urban lives. Three seminar events will be held in September 2023 in Bandung, Indonesia, in October 2023 in Bloemfontein, South Africa and in March 2024 in Durham, UK. 

To prepare for the first event in Bandung in September 2023, the team has held a preparatory meeting in early July with early-career researchers who were selected for the ECR mentoring programme. Together with the three mentors (Prof Hyun Bang Shin, Prof AbdouMaliq Simone and Dr Rita Padawangi), the team talked about the format, expectation and procedure of preparing draft papers. And drop-in sessions will also be hosted in mid-August to further support this writing process and prepare for the in-person meeting in Bandung. Meanwhile, the team also produced and shared guidelines with all conference participants regarding the logistics issues.

 Full details can be found here

 

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Dr Yimin Zhao is Assistant Professor in Urban Planning and Management, School of Public Administration and Policy, Renmin University of China. Dr Zhao is the co-Investigator for the project.


 

 

 

Past Projects

SEAC has also supported the following research projects:

Modelling Flood Risk and Community Resilience in Rayong Province, Thailand

 

Thailand Research 1

A pioneering and expansive research partnership programme between Chulalongkorn University, the University of Sussex, LSE, and the University of Bristol applied innovative methodology and world-leading practice to solve local and global challenges of flooding and climate change impact. Combining expertise in climate science, physical geography, social science and economics, the partnership team used high-resolution climate modelling to develop flood risk maps, researching how government policies have shaped communities’ responses to flooding and how community knowledge and resilience can be applied to creating better flood management policies for the government and private sector in Thailand. Full information can be found here

Please find a new research output here.

 

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Prof. Hyun Bang Shin, Co-Investigator

Prof Shin is Professor of Geography and Urban Studies in the Department of Geography and Environment. He was Director of SEAC between August 2018-July 2023.

 

COVID-19 and Southeast Asia

 

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SEAC launched a desk-based archival research project in June 2020 to compile initial responses to the COVID-19 crises, reflect upon what the crises mean for urbanisation, government, connectivity in Southeast Asia, and contemplate the post-COVID-19 urban futures. More information can be found here.

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Prof. Hyun Bang Shin, Principal Investigator

Prof Shin is Professor of Geography and Urban Studies in the Department of Geography and Environment. He was Director of SEAC between August 2018-July 2023.

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Dr Do Young Oh, Research Officer

Dr Do Young Oh, the project's Research Officer, was based jointly at the Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre and the LSE Middle East Centre.

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Dr Murray Mckenzie, Research Officer

Dr Mckenzie was the project's Research Officer, LSE Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre. 

 

The Urban Spectre of Global China: Mechanism, Consequences, and Alternatives for Urban Futures

 

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This project was funded by a British Academy grant for its Tackling the UK's International Challenges programme. The 18-month project examined four large-scale property development projects of Chinese capital, to question the ways in which the urban has been reconfigured by China’s global expansion.

More details on the project can be found here.

Hyun Shin Updated Photo

Prof. Hyun Bang Shin, Principal Investigator

Prof Shin is Professor of Geography and Urban Studies in the Department of Geography and Environment. He was Director of SEAC between August 2018-July 2023.

 

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Dr Sin Yee Koh, Co-Investigator

Dr Koh is Senior Lecturer in Global Studies, School of Arts and Social Sciences, Monash University Malaysia

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Dr Yimin Zhao, Co-Investigator

Dr Zhao is Assistant Professor in Urban Planning and Management, School of Public Administration and Policy, Renmin University of China.

 

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Prof. Ching Kwan Lee, Project Advisor

Prof. Lee is Professor of Sociology at University of California Los Angeles.

 

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Dr Pow Choon-Piew, Project Advisor

Dr Pow, former Associate Professor in the Department of Geography, National University of Singapore

 

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Dr Murray Mckenzie

Dr Mckenzie is Postdoctoral Research Assistant, LSE Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre. 

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Dr Yi Jin

Dr Jin is the former Postdoctoral Research Assistant, LSE Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre.


 

Asian Capital and the Rise of Smart Urbanism

 

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SEAC was awarded a research grant from the LSE Middle East Centre's Kuwait Programme, to start a project beginning in September 2019 , which aimed to analyse and compare how Asian cities have risen to become reference points for the development of cities in the Global South. The project examined the experience of building new cities branded as smart cities in Kuwait and the Philippines. More information can be found here.

Hyun Shin Updated Photo

Prof. Hyun Bang Shin, Principal Investigator

Prof Shin is Professor of Geography and Urban Studies in the Department of Geography and Environment. He was Director of SEAC between August 2018-July 2023. 

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Dr Do Young Oh, Research Officer

Dr Do Young Oh is the project's Research Officer, based jointly at the Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre and the LSE Middle East Centre.


 

UK-Southeast Asia Relations

 

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The purpose of this project wass to analyse UK-Southeast Asia relations, to explain recent policy change, and to offer a critical appraisal, whilst also providing policy advice in the context of Brexit.

A major aspect of the initial research in 2017/18 focused on the question of the UK‘s future partnership arrangement with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and possible options for future new trading arrangements. 

Publications:

  • Future Options for the UK-ASEAN Economic Relationship (briefing paper) - PDF
  • Steering UK-Southeast Asia relations post-Brexit (13 March 2018,  East Asia Forum) - link
Jurgen Haacke 

Jürgen Haacke, Principal Investigator

Dr Jürgen Haacke is an Associate Professor in International Relations in the LSE Department of International Relations as well as a SEAC Associate.

Myanmar in Transition

 

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This umbrella project explored the impact of political change in Myanmar. Pursued in collaboration with the LSE Global South Unit as part of its Myanmar Programme, it consisted of two research strands:

  • Myanmar foreign policy in the context of the country’s transition
  • Foreign policy agency in relation to ethnic armed organisations
Jurgen Haacke

Jürgen Haacke, Principal Investigator

Dr Jürgen Haacke is an Associate Professor in International Relations in the LSE Department of International Relations as well as a SEAC Associate.